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If you don’t know Howard directly, try one of three numerous Collected Conan and other Howard collections available as inexpensive Kindle books.
Howard was a compelling storyteller, which caught the eye of the sophisticated and erudite L. Sprague de Camp, who heralded the Conan revival of the 1960s.
Howard had a number of faults as a writer, such as thin characterisation. This helped him make a living in the pulp magazines of the Depression. He reused the same basic hero type with changes of name and environment. In fact at least sometimes he simply renamed the main character when a story featuring him didn’t sell to the main market, and he started a new series by selling it to a different magazine.

Given that he was looking at a world containing Hitler, Mussolini, and Stalin, he had a point.
Some of his characters were less Conanesque, however. He did a series about Solomon Kane, an Elizabethan Puritan encountering magic in Africa. An early illustrator missed the timeframe and put Kane in a nineteenth century Great White Hunter costume, complete with pith helmet, but using a sword.

Robin Hobb's The Farseer Trilogy fits and is by a female author
C.L. Moore's Jirel of Joiry is also good and features a female main character plus is written by a omen
Tad Williams's series Memory, Sorrow and Thorn is good
and here's a Goodreads listing of books in that category
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/3...
if you're looking for Howard books, you might want to consider the Delphi Collected Works. Burroughs also has a Collected Works that includes his Mars Series.

Robert E. Howard seemed influenced by theories on the cyclical decline of civilisations, such as those of Oswald Spengler. The timeframe of Spengler's notoriety would fit.
Thanks for the contributions!
The top of the list is dominated by Robert E. Howard, Fritz Leiber and Edgar Rice Burroughs. The episodic nature of pulp stories is a plus for me, as they can be read quickly and independently. That may be shrewd... Catherine Lucille Moore is further down the list; her Jirel of Joiry is apparently the ancestor of many redheaded warriors, from Red Sonja onward.
There's also a couple of authors that have been at the periphery of my radar for a long time, such as Roger Zelazny and Michael Moorcock. The Chronicles of Amber and the Elric saga should be explored. And there are many more besides, but I'll probably start with these names.
Unfortunately these lists are often imprecise, which is the complaint of every comment at the bottom. For instance, George R.R. Martin shows early on, though as an outsider I've always considered his cycle as high fantasy. On the other hand, I wonder whether something like Marlon James's ongoing Dark Star Trilogy might be considered contemporary sword and sorcery.

Much of their collaborated work was published under the name of Lewis Padgett, who for a time was one of more popular authors in magazine science fiction. Confusingly, some solo work had the same pen name attached, and reprints sometimes attribute a collaboration to just one of them.
See Wikipedia for bibliography, including separate articles on Moore, Kuttner, and Lewis Padgett, plus the one on Elak of Atlantis.

One late series featured not a barbarian swordsman but a clockmaker, as the protagonist. These are included in the omnibus The Reluctant King. For some basic Sword and Sorcery in more or less the Conan mold, however, see his The Tritonian Ring.
His historical fiction evokes S&S tropes in more plausible settings, based on extensive research. The best place to start with these is probably The Dragon of the Ishtar Gate, with a hero who resembles not only Conan but Robert E. Howard. Perhaps also Fritz Leiber’s Fafhrd, as he has a smaller but clever sidekick.

Indian war elephants were brought to the Mediterranean after Alexander’s death, but so far as the surviving literature goes, no one bothered to report how they did it. De Camp fills in some of the gaps.
And to add to the suspense, Aristotle’s description of the elephant shows that he never saw one!

But it should be remembered that back in the late 1950s and early 1960, when de Camp was writing these, actually *saying* that a character was a homosexual was less likely to make it into print. De Camp was acknowledging a fact of Greek life that was often glossed over in popular fiction.
Mary Renault did it better a few years earlier, as in the Last of the Wine (1956), in which it is a major theme, but Dr Camp may have been accommodating his own publishers’ wishes.

I had C.L. Moore's wiki page open as I wrote the previous post. I singled out Jirel of Joiry as an obvious starting point in exploring her fiction from an S&S perspective, but that's obviously not the end of it.
L. Sprague de Camp is another name that came up even in a cursory research about the genre, as he was instrumental in the '60s revival (and reprinting Howard's Conan stories specifically); but his talent evidently spanned beyond the confines of the genre.
Creed wrote: "Harry Potter has sorcery and swords!"
This is an interesting point. There must be clearly more to sword and sorcery than blades and magic, as I've never once seen Harry Potter described as part of the genre. I'm not in the least interested in gatekeeping, but I do have an interest in understanding what it is we're talking about.

Every science fiction reader should be familiar with Lest Darkness Fall, a major example of time travel combined with realism.

Tony

Here's the 12 issues on Goodreads: Tales from the Magician's Skull Series.

The Black God’s Kiss, the first story about Jirel, was published in Weird Tales for October 1934. It is also set in a different vaguely historical setting, so Moore may have picked up the earlier Howard story, and added the supernatural elements the made it suitable for Weird Tales. But she may have invented the character well before the publication dates.


The crossover story, “Quest of the Starstone,” written in collaboration with her husband, is in some of the Kindle editions of Jirel stories (use sample to check which), but is not part of the current Northwest Smith collection available on Kindle.
I would also suggest her science fiction “Judgement Night,” a unique treatment of galactic empires, which might have fantasy with a change of setting. And there is much more: a nice selection is in The Best of C. L. Moore, also a Kindle edition

Smith wrote a number of series, in differing backgrounds, most of them collected and put in order by Lin Carter for the Ballantine Adult Fantasy Series in the 1970s. These are now hard to find, but there are recent collections, including Kindle editions.
Jack Vance’s Dying Earth stories (also worth your time as a sword and sorcery variant), set in a far future Earth in which magic works, was probably suggested by Smith’s Zothique, the last continent, in the far future where, of course, magic works. But the stories are quite different.

There is “Clark Ashton Smith: A Critical Guide to the Man and His Work,” now in a second edition I may get on Kindle: I have never seen a copy, so this is information not a recommendation.

1 The Dying Earth, aka Mazirian the Magician (1950)
2 The Eyes of the Overworld aka Cugel the Clever (1966)
3 Cugel’s Saga, aka Cugel: The Skybreak Spatterlight
(1983)
4 Rhialto the Marvellous (1984)
There is debate as to which of these are collections, fix-ups into novels, or simply episodic novels. The new title for The Dying Earth actually makes it seem more unified, by endorsing one character as central.
They can be found under the later titles in the omnibus “Tales of the Dying Earth” (2000), available in Kindle. There was a 1999 edition as “The Compleat Dying Earth.” See the Wikipedia article “The Dying Earth,” for contents and original publication data.The article includes mentions of sequels by others.

They certainly aren’t *Sword* and Sorcery, unless one stretches the term.
And the Cugel stories are mostly unheroic: maybe a response to stories of Conan, and of Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser, as occasional thieves (among other occupations).
Maybe High Fantasy: some of the original stories from 1950 could count. And I suppose Rhialto the Magnificent might qualify. I would have to reread them before passing judgement.
But never mind the taxonomy. They are great stories, filled with brilliant ideas, and Vance’s dry sense of humour.


Well, maybe we could call it Swords & Sorceries as a sort of compromise :)

I think Jack Vance and surely Clark Ashton Smith came up on my early research into the subgenre, so it's good to have an outline of their works. On the other hand, I'm quite sure Jennifer Robertson didn't come up, so that's also a precious contribution.
Apart from the general scope of the discussion, for the time being I'm interest mainly in the (more or less) short stories rather than full-length novels. I've taken that opportunity to start reading, and partly listening, to Robert Howard's stories of the Hyborian age. I'm also keeping an ongoing commentary.

one of the first modern Sword &Sorcery. very underrated author, imo

Black God's Kiss is a long-time ultra fav of mine, and not simply because it was an early S&S. I love Moore's writing in it. It's so lush and fluid. It's the kind of writing I wish I could pull off. Also, fun fact, Joiry is the origin of the J in my name CJ (I spell it Joirie because I have an Audre Lorde-esque aversion to y's in my name--the C is from another early SFF not relevant here)

Thanks for reviving the thread!

Case 1: "dzeh-ree" or "zweh-ree", maybe "dzay-ree" /dzɛri/ or /zwɛri/ or /dʒeiri/
Cases 2 & 3: "zhwah-REE" /ʒwaʁi/
Case 4: "JOY-ree" /dʒoiɹi/
(I may have made mistakes with the IPA values. Also, I'm using the American R's IPA value.)
Books mentioned in this topic
Jirel of Joiry (other topics)The Chronicles of Amber (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Robert E. Howard (other topics)C.L. Moore (other topics)
Henry Kuttner (other topics)
Jack Vance (other topics)
Jennifer Robertson (other topics)
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My familiarity with the genre is probably limited to a few Conan the Barbarian comic book series and I'd be curious to explore the field futher. I know it has strong and weak points, e.g. that it has been considered sexist, despite women's contribution to the genre in both pen and sword. I think the lack of world-ending threats and clear morals, wich are instead typical of high fantasy, can be an interesting premise.
I'm interested in the purely escapist nature of sword and sorcery, but also on its more conscious takes. I've recently seen (queer black author) Samuel R. Delany's Return to Nevèrÿon series called "postmodern sword and sorcery".